20260715 Options Brief  Cool CPI SK Hynix options debut  Header

Options Brief - Cool CPI, SK Hynix options debut - 15 July 2026

Options 10 minutes to read

Summary:  A far softer June CPI knocked back rate-hike bets, crushed one-day VIX by nearly 28% and handed the tape to the AI and memory trade. Options on SK Hynix's newly US-listed ADR opened with about 218,500 contracts, most of it short-dated and priced near 172% implied volatility, while the ADR trades at a 50% premium to its Seoul shares. The brief covers the front-of-curve vol reset, a dispersion market where single names ignore the index, and what to watch in a brand-new options listing.


MARKET REGIME: LOW-VOL BULL  |  VIX 16.50  |  TERM STRUCTURE: CONTANGO  |  SKEW: 145.13  |  FRONT-MONTH VIX FUTURES: 18.45

  • Event vol collapsed once CPI cleared. A far softer June CPI knocked back rate-hike bets, and one-day VIX1D fell 27.75% to 10.57 as the event passed, while the rest of the curve held contango out to VIX1Y at 23.28. Spot VIX eased 3.85% to 16.50.
  • Dispersion, not direction. Three-month implied correlation COR3M dropped 8.49% to 7.65, near cycle lows, while the dispersion index (DSPX) rose to 47.37. SK Hynix, Samsung and the US chip names ran hard while the broad index barely moved.
  • The memory trade took over. SK Hynix's newly listed US options and a 27% ADR jump helped push Korea's Kospi up about 8% into a buy-side circuit breaker, and ASML raised its full-year sales outlook for the second time this year.

Vol surface data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, as of 14 July 2026 close, approx. 06:00 CET, futures and Asian markets live into Wednesday. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


Headline driver

June CPI landed far softer than feared on Tuesday, with headline prices falling 0.4% on the month and easing to 3.5% year on year and core flat at 2.6%, which knocked back fast-rising rate-hike bets and lifted Wall Street's AI and chip complex. This morning the memory trade took over: SK Hynix's newly listed US options and a 27% jump in its ADR helped push the Kospi up roughly 8% into a buy-side circuit breaker, while ASML raised its full-year sales outlook for the second time this year.

Full macro rundown in Saxo's Market Quick Take - Chips reclaim the lead - 15 July 2026.


Market snapshot, Tuesday 14 July 2026 close

  • US (Tuesday 14 July close): the S&P 500 rose 0.38% to 7,543.59 and the Nasdaq 100 added 1.10%, led by Nvidia (+4.06% to 211.80), Alphabet (+2.0%) and the semis (SMH +2.5%), while the Dow finished essentially flat. Breadth was thin: the S&P equal-weight index slipped 0.38% and healthcare (XLV) fell 1.9%.
  • Asia (Wednesday 15 July ~06:00 CET): the Kospi surged about 8% to 7,413 and tripped a buy-side circuit breaker, powered by SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, while the Hang Seng added 1.5%.
  • Europe (Wednesday 15 July open): the Stoxx 600 rose 0.2% and the AEX added 0.4%, with ASML in focus after its outlook raise.
  • Commodities and rates: WTI held near USD 80 and Brent near USD 86, gold traded near USD 4,038, and the US 10-year yield sat near 4.60% with the 2-year near 4.20%.
  • Market regime (rules-based read): Low-volatility bull, VIX 16.5, 20-day realised volatility about 12.4% and falling, S&P 500 roughly 1.3% above its 50-day moving average. This multi-week signal lags the single-name action now under way.

Equity and vol data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 14 July 2026 close and Wednesday pre-market. Costs and charges apply to ETF trades; see Saxo pricing for full details. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


Options flow sentiment

Based on end-of-day 14 July, Tuesday's positioning and not today's price action. This flow pre-dates this morning's SK Hynix and ASML moves, so it describes how desks leaned into the close, not how the market is trading now.

Single-name flow leaned bullish only in the semiconductor complex, where confirmed call demand across the chip names dominated the tape, the kind of buying that can leave dealers short upside calls and mechanically supportive on strength. Mega-cap tech premium looked heavily put-weighted on the surface, but it was skewed by deep in-the-money, longer-dated structures rather than fresh downside bets, so the bearish read there is weak. Broad index and ETF flow was close to balanced and dominated by mid-market prints and longer-dated hedges, which reads as positioning and roll activity rather than a directional macro view, leaving dealers roughly two-sided at the index level. Read together, desks leaned modestly bullish on semis while keeping index-level conviction low.

What to watch today: ASML's earnings call and the read-through to the AI and memory chain after the outlook raise, plus any follow-through in SK Hynix now that its options are live, ahead of TSMC's report on Thursday.


Volatility surface - 15 July 2026, approx. 06:00 CET

VIX term structure

  • VIX spot 16.50 (-3.85%)
  • VIX1D 10.57 (-27.75%) · VIX9D 13.46 (-11.04%)
  • VIX3M 19.30 (-1.73%) · VIX6M 21.52 (-0.78%) · VIX1Y 23.28 (-0.60%), contango out to one year, with the front crushed hardest as VIX1D marked the passing of the CPI event

VIX futures

  • Front-month VIX futures 18.45, above a spot VIX of 16.50
  • Second-month VIX futures 19.45, front-to-second ratio 0.945, a steady contango

Skew and correlation

  • CBOE SKEW 145.13 (-0.38%), the premium for out-of-the-money downside protection, range-bound
  • COR3M 7.65 (-8.49%), three-month implied correlation, near cycle lows
  • DSPX 47.37 (+1.07%), the S&P 500 dispersion index, firming. Equity put/call ratio 0.77, index put/call 1.01

Cross-asset volatility

  • OVX 59.89 (-0.60%), oil volatility running near 3.6x the VIX
  • MOVE 75.03 (-3.53%), the Treasury gauge, easing
  • GVZ 25.02 (-7.09%) · VXN 26.28 (-3.74%) · RVX 20.67 (-6.60%) · VVIX 93.53 (-1.84%)

Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 14 July 2026 close.


What the market is pricing

  • Session implied move. With VIX1D back at 10.57, the one-day vol surface implies a move of only about 0.65%, near 50 S&P points, for the current session. The market is pricing today's calendar as light now that CPI is behind it.
  • Correlation read. COR3M near cycle lows with the dispersion index rising says the market is paying up for single-stock movement while pricing the index calmer. A tape where SK Hynix and Samsung jump 6% to 12% while the S&P adds 0.4% is that bet playing out in the open.
  • Tail risk signal. SKEW near 145 and VVIX eased to 93.53, so even with the melt-up in chips the market is not paying up for downside protection. What is priced here is continuation risk in single names, not an index-level break.
  • Term structure and premium. Front and second-month VIX futures sit above spot in contango, and 20-day realised vol at 12.4% is running below implied, so in our view the market is embedding a calmer index than options imply, a backdrop that can favour premium sellers. The catch is dispersion: the priced-in calm is an index-level story, and the real movement is in single names. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor.

This week: the SK Hynix options debut, in focus

The topic of the day is a brand-new US options market on the world's hottest memory name. SK Hynix's American depositary receipts priced at USD 149 on 9 July and raised USD 26.5bn, the largest US share sale ever by a foreign company, ahead of Alibaba's 2014 debut. The stock (ticker SKHY, ten ADRs to one Seoul-listed share) closed its first session up 13% at USD 168, and by Tuesday it had run about 27% to near USD 194, roughly 30% above the IPO price. Options on the ADR opened on 14 July across Cboe and MIAX.

  • A big, short-dated first day. Day one saw about 218,500 contracts. Each contract controls 100 ADRs, so that is exposure to roughly 21.9 million ADRs, north of USD 4bn in notional, on the first session alone. Only five monthly expiries are listed so far, July through September plus December and March 2027, with no weeklies yet, and over two-thirds of volume sat in this Friday's July contract.
  • Triple-digit implied volatility. Implied vol on the 17 July expiry printed near 172%, the put-to-call ratio ran about 0.96, and the busiest line was the USD 185 call. On a brand-new class the practical warning is mechanical: open interest is thin, bid-ask spreads are wide, and a triple-digit implied vol is partly market makers pricing their own uncertainty, so screen prices can jump. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor. Costs and charges apply to each leg; see Saxo pricing for costs and applicable charges.
  • The link to Seoul. The ADR and the Seoul-listed shares represent the same company and should track each other over time, but they trade in different sessions, so the US line effectively sets the tone for the next Korean open. Tuesday's 27% ADR jump did exactly that: it preceded Wednesday's 9% to 12% move in the local shares and the Kospi circuit breaker. The ADR now trades at roughly a 50% premium to the Seoul shares, far above the 3% gap at pricing, because ADRs convert freely into local stock while the reverse needs regulatory approval, which blunts the usual arbitrage that would close the gap.

In our view the things to watch are that premium normalising, the thin and wide new-listing options market, and the near-172% implied vol, any of which could move sharply once the debut euphoria fades.

Listing and options data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, as of 14 July 2026. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


Conclusion

The soft CPI print reset the front of the vol curve and handed the tape to the AI and memory trade into today. In our view the index level is not the story; the dispersion beneath it is, with chip and memory names trading with a life of their own and a brand-new SK Hynix options market pricing triple-digit near-term volatility. The read that keeps recurring, from correlation to term structure to that first-day SK Hynix activity, is that single-name movement is doing more work than the index-level move heading into TSMC on Thursday.

A contained index range does not mean a quiet day, it means the market expects the action to be idiosyncratic rather than one broad swing. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor, and cheaper index premium is not a signal on its own. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


The author does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article. FX and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 64% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading FX and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how FX and CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. This brief is for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.

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